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Today's paper. Last Updated: 05/25/2012

10/31/2003

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Global Eye -- An Inspector Calls

The Bushists are now in full flight from the reality of David Kay's report: hiding it, twisting it, pretending it doesn't mean what it clearly says.

Back to Perestroika Era in Factory Film

Vadim Abdrashitov's ""Magnetic Storms,"" opens with a characteristic scene: around the nighttime perimeters of a factory, gangs of workers clash in an apparently ritual fight.

Cast of Film Stars Livens Up Elegiac Drama

London-based screenwriter Ronald Harwood has been most successful when delving, to one extent or another, into the world of the artist.

Levine Shows Moscow How It's Done

Last Monday, some 100 young musicians from 35 countries, playing together in the UBS Verbier Festival Youth Orchestra and led by the distinguished American maestro James Levine brought to the Great Hall of the Moscow Conservatory music-making of a quality rarely heard from any of Moscow's own grossly inflated stock of orchestral ensembles.

Cook's Corner -- Pumpkin Turnovers

If you can't win a prize for your costume at a Halloween party this weekend then take along these pumpkin turnovers and win a prize for your cooking.

Trick or Treat With Ghosts of Moscow's Past

Whether you're after Halloween thrills and chills or just a peaceful place to stroll, a cemetery can often be the best destination.

Ballet Stars to Take to Stage

Throughout most of the 1960s, 70s and 80s, the ballet of the Bolshoi Theater boasted what was probably the strongest troupe of male dancers ever assembled by any dance company anywhere. Among the leading dancers was Mikhail Lavrovsky.

Klimov Made History One Film at a Time

Perestroika got under way with the breakthrough success in 1985 of ""Come and See,"" the epochal, apocalyptic World War II film by Russian director Elem Klimov, who died in Moscow last Sunday at the age of 71.

Beats and Bangs for Karelian Folk

For the past 11 years, Myllarit, Karelia's leading folk band, has done its fair share in putting Karelia's capital, Petrozavodsk, on the world music map. The band plays six concerts in Moscow next week.

Russian Poets in Israel Learn to Speak in Tongues

Israeli poet Meir Wieseltier was one of a handful of Israeli poets who made the trip to the Moscow poetry festival, dedicated to Russian-language poets no longer in Russia.


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